Restaurant in Tokyo, Japan
The Burn
230ptsAmerican cooking, OAD-ranked, Aoyama basement.

About The Burn
An OAD-recognised American kitchen in Kita-Aoyama, The Burn is the right call when you want a serious dinner that breaks from Tokyo's kaiseki-or-French default. Booking is easy, the station connection is direct, and three consecutive years of Opinionated About Dining recognition confirm the kitchen earns its place among the city's better tables. Book two to three weeks out for weekend dinner.
The Burn, Tokyo — Pearl Verdict
If you have been to The Burn once, the question on a second visit is whether it holds up when the novelty of finding American cuisine in Kita-Aoyama has worn off. The short answer: yes, with caveats. The Burn has climbed the Tokyo dining rankings steadily — from an Opinionated About Dining recommendation in 2023 to #400 in 2024, then #508 in 2025. That slight dip in ranking is worth noting, not as a red flag, but as a signal that the competition around it has intensified. Book it for a special occasion or a business dinner where you want something genuinely different from the kaiseki-or-French binary that dominates Tokyo's leading tables.
Portrait
The Burn sits in Basement 1 of the Aoyama Building, directly connected to Aoyama-Itchome Station's Exit 0. That underground approach , descending into a room rather than arriving at a street-level facade , shapes the atmosphere before you even sit down. The visual register here is deliberately different from the minimalist timber-and-white aesthetic that defines so many of Tokyo's serious restaurants. An American kitchen operating at this level, in this neighbourhood, in this format, is a specific proposition: it works leading when you arrive knowing what you came for.
Chef Fumio Yonezawa runs an American programme that has earned consistent recognition from Opinionated About Dining, one of the more demanding international tracking systems for serious restaurants. A 4.3 from 446 Google reviews adds a volume-weighted endorsement that many of the city's quieter fine-dining rooms cannot match. For a first-timer or a returning guest, that consistency across both critical and crowd-sourced signals is reassuring.
The hours matter for how you plan your visit. The Burn runs two services Tuesday through Saturday , lunch from 11:30 am to 2:30 pm, and dinner from 5:30 pm to 10 pm. It is closed Sundays and Mondays. The dinner window closing at 10 pm means this is not a late-night option in the way that some of Tokyo's izakayas or bar-forward venues are, but 5:30 pm is an early start that suits long, unhurried meals or pre-theatre pacing. For a special occasion dinner, the early opening actually gives you room: arrive at 5:30 pm, eat without rush, and still have the evening ahead of you.
Booking here is rated Easy. That is a meaningful advantage over the city's harder-to-access omakase counters or tasting-menu-only rooms. You are not fighting a lottery reservation system or refreshing an app at midnight. Plan two to three weeks ahead for a weekend dinner to be safe, but mid-week lunch is likely available with shorter notice. The direct station connection also removes one of Tokyo's common friction points: navigating an unfamiliar neighbourhood after dark is not a concern.
For a business meal or celebration dinner, The Burn offers a differentiator that the French and Japanese fine-dining options in the same price bracket do not: it gives guests who find kaiseki or tasting menus fatiguing a genuinely considered alternative. If your guest has been in Tokyo for a week eating omakase and wagyu, an American kitchen operating at OAD-recognised level reads as thoughtful, not lazy.
Know Before You Go
- Address: Aoyama Building B1F, 1-2-3 Kita-Aoyama, Minato-ku, Tokyo , directly connected to Aoyama-Itchome Station, Exit 0
- Hours: Tuesday–Saturday, 11:30 am–2:30 pm and 5:30–10:00 pm; closed Sunday and Monday
- Booking difficulty: Easy , two to three weeks ahead recommended for weekend dinner; shorter notice usually sufficient mid-week
- Price range: Not published; category and OAD ranking suggest mid-to-upper tier
- Awards: Opinionated About Dining Leading Restaurants in Japan , Recommended (2023), #400 (2024), #508 (2025)
- Google rating: 4.3 from 446 reviews
- Cuisine: American, by Chef Fumio Yonezawa
- Good for: Special occasions, business dinners, guests seeking an alternative to Japanese or French tasting formats
How It Compares
See the comparison section below for how The Burn sits against Harutaka, RyuGin, L'Effervescence, and others in Tokyo's top-table field.
Further Afield
If you are building a wider Japan itinerary around serious food, the comparisons extend beyond Tokyo. Gion Sasaki in Kyoto, HAJIME in Osaka, and akordu in Nara each offer a different register to The Burn. Closer to home, Goh in Fukuoka, 1000 in Yokohama, and 6 in Okinawa round out a Japan-wide picture for guests who want to benchmark The Burn's American proposition against what else the country is doing at this level. For American dining in a different context, Hilda and Jesse in San Francisco and Selby's in Atherton are useful reference points on what the format can look like at home.
For everything else in the city, see our guides to Tokyo hotels, Tokyo bars, Tokyo wineries, and Tokyo experiences. Peer restaurants worth comparing directly include Sézanne and Crony.
Compare The Burn
| Venue | Cuisine | Price | Booking Difficulty |
|---|---|---|---|
| The Burn | American | Easy | |
| Harutaka | Sushi | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| RyuGin | Kaiseki, Japanese | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| L'Effervescence | French | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| HOMMAGE | Innovtive French, French | ¥¥¥¥ | Unknown |
| Florilège | French | ¥¥¥ | Unknown |
What to weigh when choosing between The Burn and alternatives.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is lunch or dinner better at The Burn?
Lunch is the lower-commitment entry point: service runs 11:30am–2:30pm Tuesday through Saturday, and midday slots tend to be easier to secure than prime evening hours. Dinner (5:30–10pm) gives you more time at the table and suits the full range of the kitchen's American-format menu. If this is your first visit, dinner is the better test of what chef Fumio Yonezawa's kitchen can do.
Can The Burn accommodate groups?
The venue is in the basement of the Aoyama Building — a compact, below-street-level space that typically limits large-group bookings. Parties of two to four are the practical sweet spot here. If you are planning for six or more, check the venue's official channels before assuming a table is available, as the room layout may not flex that far.
What should I wear to The Burn?
The Burn is an American-cuisine restaurant in one of Tokyo's smarter neighbourhoods, ranked in the OAD Top 400 for Japan in 2024. That context points toward neat, put-together dress rather than anything formal: think clean trousers and a collar rather than a suit. Tokyo dining rooms at this level rarely enforce jacket requirements, but arriving visibly underdressed in Kita-Aoyama reads as a misread of the room.
Can I eat at the bar at The Burn?
Bar seating availability at The Burn is not confirmed in available documentation. Given the basement location in the Aoyama Building and the kitchen's OAD-ranked profile, the room is likely counter- or table-configured rather than built around a casual bar service model. Check directly when booking if counter or bar seating matters to your visit.
What should a first-timer know about The Burn?
The Burn is closed Monday and Sunday, so plan around Tuesday through Saturday service. It is directly connected to Aoyama-Itchome Station Exit 0, making it easy to reach with no navigation required above ground. Chef Fumio Yonezawa's kitchen has climbed the OAD Japan rankings three consecutive years — Recommended in 2023, #400 in 2024, #508 in 2025 — which signals a serious operation rather than a novelty act. The American cuisine format is genuinely unusual in this part of Tokyo, and that is the reason to come: not just to eat well, but to see how the format translates.
Hours
- Monday
- Closed
- Tuesday
- 11:30 am–2:30 pm, 5:30–10 pm
- Wednesday
- 11:30 am–2:30 pm, 5:30–10 pm
- Thursday
- 11:30 am–2:30 pm, 5:30–10 pm
- Friday
- 11:30 am–2:30 pm, 5:30–10 pm
- Saturday
- 11:30 am–2:30 pm, 5:30–10 pm
- Sunday
- Closed
Recognized By
More restaurants in Tokyo
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- SazenkaSazenka is the address for Chinese cuisine in Tokyo at its most technically demanding. Chef Tomoya Kawada's wakon-kansai approach — Japanese seasonal ingredients applied through Chinese culinary technique — has earned consecutive Tabelog Gold Awards from 2019 to 2026, a #71 ranking on the World's 50 Best 2025, and 99 points from La Liste 2026. At JPY 50,000–59,999 per head, it is one of the hardest tables in the city to book and worth the effort.
- NarisawaNarisawa is Tokyo's most credentialled innovative tasting menu restaurant — two Michelin stars, Asia's 50 Best number 12, and a Tabelog Silver award — running at JPY 80,000–99,999 per head. Book for a milestone occasion, confirm vegetarian or vegan needs in advance, and reserve at least two to three months out. With 15 seats and reservation-only access, this is one of Tokyo's hardest tables to secure.
- FlorilègeFlorilège delivers two Michelin stars and an Asia's 50 Best #17 ranking at a dinner price of ¥22,000 — competitive for Tokyo at this level. Chef Hiroyasu Kawate's plant-forward tasting menus around an open-kitchen counter at Azabudai Hills make this the strongest choice for contemporary French dining in Tokyo if theatrical, produce-led cooking is what you want. Book well in advance; availability is near-impossible at short notice.
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- MyojakuMyojaku is a 2-Michelin-star, 14-course French-leaning omakase in Nishiazabu holding a 4.47 Tabelog score, Tabelog Silver 2025–2026, and Asia's 50 Best #45 (2025). Chef Hidetoshi Nakamura's water-forward, no-dashi approach shifts meaningfully with the seasons — making timing your reservation as important as getting one. Budget JPY 50,000–59,999 per head plus 10% service charge; reservations only, near-impossible to secure.
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